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August 2003 Issue

Our seventh issue covers website tools and design. Plus reviews, interviews and columns.

Art and Narrative: The Monitor Has Two Faces


Carl Jung called it the Shadow, though it's most commonly referred to as the Alter-Ego these days – a way of understanding how the different, and occasionally disparate parts of our personality relate to one another. The alter ego is that reflection of our inner-selves that we project into the outer world.

Sabrina Online by Eric W. Schwartz, reviewed by Matt Trepal

By: Matt Trepal
Department: Reviews
Issue: August 2003 Issue

Sabrina Online by Eric W Schwartz

As arguably one of the most well-known and oldest anthropomorphic animal (or "furry") comics on the Internet (indeed, having gone online in 1996, it may be among the oldest webcomics, period), Sabrina Online, created by Eric W. Schwartz, has been cited as inspiration for many Internet artists. Like Helen of Troy, the title character may be the face that launched a thousand strips.

Scott McCloud Answers the Readers' Questions


Depending on who you ask, he's either the guru behind the webcomics revolution, bringing thousands online with ideas of infinite canvases and micropayments dancing in their heads, or some guy who wrote some books about comics and had nothing to do with those first webcomics pioneers.

Well, either's true.

Scott McCloud answered some questions put out by you, the Comixpedia community. And boy did he ever answer them.

Webcomics Are From Uranus: Looking For Some Good Heroine


I feel like a drug addict these days, searching for some good heroines.

Seriously, if you look at film, books, comics – heroines are scarce and even scarcer is a *good* heroine. I'm not looking for a Lara Croft who is a man with boobs. I'm not looking for girls who save the day with cute antics. I want a heroine who is a woman with her own skills, who is uncompromised by super powers or a need to appeal to men.

Stickler and Hat-Trick review Dana Kelly's Residence Life


Stickler and Hat-trick, in association with Comixpedia present…

Stickler and Hat-trick at the Keyboard

RESIDENCE LIFE, created by Dana Kelly

A Site For Sore Eyes: Principles of Website Design by David Wright

By: David Wright
Department: Features
Issue: August 2003 Issue

Why are there so many badly-designed webcomic sites out there? For a community that prides itself in its creativity, you would think that the sites would show that. For the most part, it seems that your average site’s design is almost an afterthought. Unimportant.

A Webcomic Tutorial Primer

By: Xaviar Xerexes
Department: Features
Issue: August 2003 Issue

So you draw and/or write a webcomic?

No matter how good you are, there's always something more to learn. One way to learn is to read a lot of webcomics. You can also learn a lot from countless free tutorials created by some truly talented artists.

Juxtapose This: I Am A Webcomics Evangelist


So, here I am, a student at a liberal arts college, majoring in a liberal arts department. Part of this department's "cool" is that its logo involves an interwoven Hebrew Aleph and Greek Omega.

Yes. It's that kind of major.

After two years of this, you might think that I'm ready for some concrete, real-world learning. Yet from personal experience, I can tell you that I am gaining in something that will help me throughout my adult life. Screw employability! I'm not paying over $30,000 dollars a year to qualify myself for a paycheck, my friends! I'm paying for a lifetime supply of high-minded pet-peeves.

An Interview with Vince Coleman by Emanuella Grinberg


Vince Coleman

Vince Coleman has a unique perspective when it comes to both education and creating online comics. Here's an artist who majored in studio art and Japanese at the University of Texas in Austin before flying halfway around the world to Sapporo, Japan, for love and to learn Japanese amid the activity of creating his Web site, www.vince-coleman.com.

Gasps and Guffaws: Balancing Humor and Drama in Webcomics by Jeff Darlington

By: Jeff Darlington
Department: Features
Issue: August 2003 Issue

Sad Mask - Illustration by Bill Duncan

Free from the stranglehold of syndicate and newspaper editors, webcomics have the luxury of unfettered imagination, allowing creators to develop their characters however they wish, catering only to their own (and presumably their readers') whims. The protagonist may be a lighthearted loveable oaf, a brooding anti-hero with deep psychological scars, or a seductive vixen with dubious motives.